Staying Organized with the Outlook Journal
15 CHAPTER
Staying Organized with the Outlook Journal
In this chapter
Using Outlook's Journal 362 Working with the Journal Folder 364 Setting Up Automatic Email Journaling 367 Using Journal's Other Tracking Capabilities 370 Creating Journal Items Manually 373 Creating Custom Journal Entry Types 375 Troubleshooting 376 Improving Your Outlook 378
362 Chapter 15 Staying Organized with the Outlook Journal
Using Outlook's Journal
Outlook's journal is a lot like a diary and contains a record of your daily activities. Unlike a
15
diary, it's somewhat limited to recording specific records, such as email you send and
receive, phone calls you make, and documents you work on. Although it does a good job of
automatically tracking your usage of Microsoft Office applications, you must record journal
entries for other events or applications yourself.
Among the activities you can automatically record in the journal are
Email you send and receive to selected contacts Task requests and responses Meeting requests, responses, and cancellations Telephone calls you initiate to a contact Office documents you work on
By automatically recording all documents you work on, all email sent to specific contacts, and phone calls made, the journal keeps logs of your activity. This is particularly useful to anyone who needs to know how long she worked on a document or spent on a phone call because the journal tracks the elapsed time along with the event.
When you manually create new journal entries, you're limited in the entry types you can choose. The predefined entry types cover basic business events, such as
Letters, documents, and faxes you send or receive Telephone calls and conversations Notes you take Remote sessions you participate in
NOTE
Even though you can't create new entry types in the form, you can edit the Registry to add additional types to the drop-down list. See "Creating Custom Journal Entry Types" later in this chapter to learn how to create your own journal entry types.
The journal form (see Figure 15.1) contains only a few basic fields:
Subject Entry Type Company Start Time (includes time and date fields) Duration Notes
Using Outlook's Journal 363
After you've entered the information in the fields, press the Save and Close button and your journal item is finished.
Figure 15.1
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Enter a subject and
notes about the event
in the journal form
and save.
After you create journal entries, you can use Views to organize your journal:
By Entry Type--The default view; based on Timeline view with items grouped by entry type
By Contact--Based on Timeline view and grouped by contact By Category--Based on Timeline view and grouped by category Entry List--Based on the Table view format; initially sorted by creation date Last Seven Days--Based on the Table view format; filtered to display entries created
within the past seven days Phone Calls--Based on a Table view, filtered to display only phone calls
You might prefer to view your journal in a traditional calendar format. If so, you can create a custom view using a day/week/month format layout.
TIP
Journal can display the week numbers in a Timeline view. Right-click on the bar where the month and year are displayed, choose Other Settings, and then check the box in the Scales section to Show Week Numbers.
Who Needs to Use the Journal
Although many people don't use the journal, doing so offers you two advantages. The first is that because the journal can automatically record phone calls, email, task and meeting requests, and responses for selected contacts, you can easily go back and verify that you sent an email or your colleague accepted an invitation.
364 Chapter 15 Staying Organized with the Outlook Journal
Second, the journal records the duration you worked on a task. If you bill by the hour or
just want to know how long you spent writing a report, the journal can tell you. You don't
have to remember to set a timer; you need only select the option to automatically record all
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files created using specific Office applications.
One reason many people give for not using the journal is that journaling causes your mailbox store to grow very large. When the journal automatically creates entries for many of your contacts and for all Office documents, you could end up with several hundred entries at the end of each week, many of which offer little or no additional value. Unless you use AutoArchive to clean out the journal regularly, you might have thousands of items in the journal.
When the Journal Is Helpful
You can let the journal automatically create records for Office documents or Outlook items you create. Along with creating an automatic journal item for you, it also records the time you spent working on the documents.
Although journal entries aren't automatically created for all activities you might want to include in your journal, it takes little effort to create journal entries for all the activities you do. If you need to go back a few months and find a document you worked on, it's often easier to look in the journal and use views or Outlook's advanced find to find the journal entry than it is to search your computer's hard drive for filenames you can't remember.
Working with the Journal Folder
When you open the Journal folder, you'll see the default By Type view: a timeline grouped by entry type. This view has the date running left to right across the top of the pane, with the journal entries listed under the dates. The Timeline view default shows seven days, as shown in Figure 15.2.
Along with scrolling, you can right-click on the row with the month and year to display the date picker or, on the date scale, choose Go to Date to move around the journal. Although the Outlook bar has a link for opening shared journals, only Exchange Server users can open and use shared Journal folders.
Use the View menu to select different views of your Journal folder, including timelines grouped By Contact or By Category and Table views showing all items, or filtered by the last seven days, or limit the display to phone calls only.
The Reading Pane is turned off on the Journal folder by default; however, you can turn it on using the View, Reading Pane menu selection. You can use the Reading Pane with any view, including the Timeline view, and you can see all the journal fields in the Reading Pane. For security reasons, you can't open shortcuts on the journal item from the Reading Pane; you have to open the journal entry first. When the actual file is attached to the journal entry, you can open it from the Reading Pane. In most views, you'll want the Reading Pane on the bottom of the window to maximize the viewing area for Timeline views.
Figure 15.2 The default view for the Journal folder is a Timeline view.
Working with the Journal Folder 365 15
Using Views
The journal comes with six predefined views, using timeline or table layouts. You can customize these views or create your own custom views. You aren't limited to using Timeline or Table views with the journal. Day/Week/Month views also work well with the journal, although Icon and Card views do not.
The following are Timeline views for grouping the journal entries:
By Entry type By Contact By Category
Each of these views defaults to showing the journaled items for the week. You can change this to one day (segmented by the hour) or one month by pressing the Day or Month toolbar button. You can return to a seven-day view by clicking the Week button.
One of the first changes you might want to make in a Timeline view is reducing the size of the font used for the month and year. Right-click on the bar where the month and year are displayed, choose Other Settings, and then adjust the size of the Upper Scale Font in the Format Timeline View dialog box, as shown in Figure 15.3.
Other options you can change from the Format Timeline View dialog box include showing week numbers and changing the maximum width of the labels displayed with the icons. You can also control whether the icon label is displayed when viewing a month in the timeline.
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